A half a metre is basically 50 centimetres since 1m makes 100 centimetres.
Maybe 9?
To determine how many half meters are needed to measure 4 and a half meters, we need to divide the total length by the length of each half meter. In this case, 4 and a half meters is equivalent to 9 half meters (4.5 meters ÷ 0.5 meters). Therefore, 9 half meters are needed to measure 4 and a half meters in total.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the math questions now? Okay, let me break it down for you. So, a half meter is 0.5 meters, right? To make 4 and a half meters, you'd need 9 half meters. It's like basic math, man.
You cant work out th cubic capacity of a triangle you can work out the area. Measure the two longest sides multiply them together and half the result.
Grams is no good - it is a measure of weight not length. Kilometers measure length - but only if your table-top is a few miles long. Most appropriate would be Meters - your average dining table is about one-and-a-half meters long.
You say to yourself: -- I know that one kilometer is 1,000 meters. -- So two kilometers are 2,000 meters. -- And half of a kilometer must be 500 meters. -- And when I glue the half kilometer onto the two kilometers, it makes 2,500 meters all together.
804.672 meters in half a mile.
You would use meters. A kilometer is over half a mile, but a meter is just longer than a yard.
Half of 6 meters is 3 meters. When you divide a quantity by 2, you are essentially splitting it into two equal parts. In this case, dividing 6 meters by 2 gives you 3 meters, which is half of the original length.
Half of 10 meters is 5 meters.
Half a kilometre is 500 metres.
No. A kilometer is 1000 meters. Half of 1000 meters is 500 meters.